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  • 10
    Sep
    2012
    5:48am, EDT

    Stars close London Paralympics that 'lifted the cloud of limitation'

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Fireworks light up the stadium during the closing ceremony of the London 2012 Paralympic Games at the Olympic Stadium on September 9, 2012.

    Stefan Wermuth / Reuters

    Performers with flame throwers burn the grass in the Olympic Stadium during the closing ceremony.

    Hannah Johnston / Getty Images

    Singer Rihanna performs during the closing ceremony.

    Peter MacDiarmid / Getty Images

    Swimmer Ellie Simmonds of Great Britain, right, who won four medals during the Games, enjoys the atmosphere with fellow Team GB Paralympians during the closing ceremony.

    Peter MacDiarmid / Getty Images

    Jay-Z performs with Coldplay during the closing ceremony. The stars were paid a nominal one pound ($1.60) to play.

    Hannah Johnston / Getty Images

    Circus artists enter the stadium from the air.

    The Associated Press reports — Farewell, London. Good luck matching that, Rio.

     Coldplay, Rihanna and Jay-Z rocked the Olympic Stadium on Sunday night to give the biggest-ever Paralympic Games a rousing send-off, wrapping up an unforgettable summer of sports in Britain.

     The three-hour party at the packed 80,000-seat arena in east London gave the world a chance to celebrate 11 days of Paralympic competition that have shifted perceptions and shattered stereotypes about the disabled.

     "In this country, we will never think of sport the same way and we will never think of disability the same way," said Sebastian Coe, chairman of the London organizing committee. "The Paralympians have lifted the cloud of limitation." Read the full story. 

    Related content:

    • 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage
    • Look back at the best images from the opening ceremony
    • London 2012's legacy under the spotlight
    • Race car driver who cheated death wins 3 medals
    • More images from the Paralympic Games on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    14 comments

    Great Britain did a fantastic job hosting the Olympics and Paralympics this summer. Congratulations to participants, volunteers, residents and supporters of all types. Thank you for a job well done!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sports, london, world-news, london-2012, closing-ceremony, paralympics
  • 6
    Sep
    2012
    6:39am, EDT

    Blind runner's despair turns to joy at Paralympics

    Kerim Okten / EPA

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Blind Brazilian runner Terezinha Guilhermina and her guide Guilherme Soares de Santana react after crossing the finish line to win the Women's 100m T11 final at the Paralympic Games in London on Wednesday night. 

    Blind or partially-sighted athletes are permitted to use a guide runner in Paralympic races, but the guide is never permitted to cross the finish line before the blind runner. At the 2012 Games, guides became eligible for medals for the first time.

     Video: Team USA guns for Oscar Pistorius in 100m showdown

    24 hours earlier Guilhermina's bid for 400m glory was derailed when Soares de Santana tripped on the home straight, a moment captured in a series of heartbreaking images published on PhotoBlog.

    But their despair was replaced by joy as Guilhermina took the 100m gold in a world record time of 12.01 seconds, adding to the 200m title she won on Sunday.

     

    Suzanne Plunkett / Reuters

    Kerim Okten / EPA

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Related content:

    • Oscar Pistorius sorry for timing, not content, of angry outburst at Paralympics
    • Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics
    • Ex-Marine Angela Madsen on her journey from homelessness to Paralympics
    • Nightly News: Representing Afghanistan at the Paralympic Games
    • 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage
    • More images from the Paralympic Games on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    48 comments

    The human spirit, thank you for showing us how far we can go!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sports, running, london, london-2012, featured, track-and-field, paralympics, terezinha-guilhermina, guilherme-soares-de-santana
  • 4
    Sep
    2012
    5:17pm, EDT

    Heartbreak after blind runner's guide falls just short of finish line at Paralympic Games in London

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Terezinha Guilhermina of Brazil runs as her guide Guilherme Soares de Santana lies on the track after he fell in the Women's 400m - T12 Final on day 6 of the London 2012 Paralympic Games at Olympic Stadium on Sept. 4, in London, England.

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Assia El Hannouni of France wins gold in the Women's 400m - T12 Final on day 6 of the London 2012 Paralympic Games at Olympic Stadium on Sept. 4, in London, England.

    Christopher Lee / Getty Images

    Terezinha Guilhermina of Brazil and her guide Guilherme Soares de Santana lie on the track after falling in the Women's 400m - T12 Final on day 6 of the London 2012 Paralympic Games at Olympic Stadium on Sept. 4, in London, England.

    Leon Neal / AFP - Getty Images

    Brazil's Terezhina Guilhermina and her guide Guilherme Soares de Santana console each other after Soares de Santana fell just ahead of the finish line of the women's 400m T12 final at the Paralympic Games at the Olympic Park in east London, England on Sept. 4.

    Update, September 6th: The night after these pictures were taken Terezinha Guilhermina and Guilherme Soares de Santana returned to the track, and this time their race had a much happier ending. Find out what happened when they competed in the 100m final.

    Related content:

    • Video: Team USA guns for Oscar Pistorius in 100m showdown 
    • Oscar Pistorius sorry for timing, not content, of angry outburst at Paralympics
    • Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics
    • Ex-Marine Angela Madsen on her journey from homelessness to Paralympics
    • Nightly News: Representing Afghanistan at the Paralympic Games
    • 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage
    • More images from the Paralympic Games on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    6 comments

    Did every runner have a guide? How does the guide work with the runner? Are they in contact? Did the two trip each other? Did they get up and finish the race? Are there alternatives to guides? It would be OK with me for athletes to use their guide dogs in the race.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sports, running, london, london-2012, track-and-field, paralympics, terezinha-guilhermina, guilherme-soares-de-santana
  • 4
    Sep
    2012
    8:41am, EDT

    Cringe! Britain's finance chief booed at Paralympic Games

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    LONDON -- If there’s one sound nobody expects to hear at a Paralympic gold medal ceremony, it’s booing - let alone the sound of the 80,000-seat Olympic Stadium crowd jeering in unison. 

    But that’s exactly what happened Monday evening when British Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, who is in charge of steering the country’s economy out of its current doldrums, was introduced to present medals for the men’s (T38) 400-meter race.

    Video clips of Osborne's embarrassed reaction quickly went viral.


    His anticipated cuts to public welfare spending, which have angered many in the disabled community, may have been behind the huge boo.

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    Adam Hills, disabled comedian and host of Channel 4’s “The Last Leg” program, joked: “Who went, ‘Hmm, who's the best person to give out medals to disabled people? I know, the guy in charge of funding cuts for disabled people. That won’t go wrong!’”

    Most unpopular
    A recent poll shows Osborne to be the most unpopular member of the British government, with 56 percent of voters saying he’s doing a “bad job” and 48 percent saying he should lose his job altogether.

    Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics

    Osborne seemed unfazed by his lack of popularity.

    “If I was trying to win a popularity stakes, there are some easy things I could do. I could spend a lot more money –  that might make me popular in the short term,” he told the BBC’s The Andrew Marr Show on Sunday.  “It’s not the right decision... In a difficult environment, it’s not surprising that the Chancellor is not the most popular member of the government.”

    Cameras are swarming Prince Harry once again, as he steps out for the first time since his Las Vegas photo scandal, but this time they are catching him doing good works, visiting sick children and appearing at the Paralympics. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    Prime Ministers get booed too
    Obsorne wasn’t the only one to feel the crowd’s disdain. Over at the aquatics center, his boss Prime Minister David Cameron was also met with jeers.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Some booing could be heard as he stepped up to present 17-year-old British swimmer Ellie Simmonds with her gold medal for the 200m individual medley.

    In this case, though, wild cheers erupted in favor Ellie, drowning out much of the booing and keeping the focus firmly on the champion.

    More coverage of the London Paralympics from Britain's ITV News

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Pistorious sorry for timing, not content, of Paralympics outburst
    • Sun Myung Moon, founder of Unification Church, dies at 92
    • Girl accused of blasphemy in Pakistan may have been framed by Muslim cleric
    • 'Big enough for all of us': Clinton says US can work with China in Pacific
    • Assad stays cool amid reports of bread-line slaughter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    17 comments

    It's "unfazed", not "unphased". MSNBC apparently isn't satisfied with hiring people who didn't go to journalism school - now they want people who didn't finish 8th grade.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: economy, europe, osborne, uk, sport, london-2012, featured, paralympics, austerity
  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    3:56am, EDT

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    Channel 4 Paralympics - Meet the Superhumans from IWRF on Vimeo.

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    LONDON -- A battlefield explosion sends troops flying, a speeding car flips over on a highway, a "Murderball" player is knocked right out of his wheelchair, all set to a fierce Public Enemy soundtrack. 

    "Forget everything you thought you knew about strength. Forget everything you thought you knew about humans. It's time to do battle. Meet the Superhumans."

    That’s how British TV viewers are being introduced to this year’s Paralympic athletes by Channel 4, which is broadcasting the London 2012 Games. Its campaign is giving Superbowl ads a run for their money, going viral with more than 500,000 views on YouTube alone.


    The hard-hitting ad is designed to jolt the public into a state of awareness and awe of what many of these disabled athletes have had to deal with just to stay alive, let alone compete at an elite level. It highlights that the competitors have overcome disabilities and disasters most of us cannot begin to imagine or will ever have to face. And that was before they became world-class competitors.

    Transforming the despair of being paralyzed in battle into determination, Iraq War veteran Scott Winkler sets his sights on a medal at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

    More coverage of the London Paralympics from Britain's ITV News

    The campaign also aims to combat the impression that the Paralympics is essentially the "Olympics-lite." Among the sports the ad focuses on is wheelchair rugby -- which is so violent that it's been dubbed "Murderball." The sheer amount of full-force contact between players requires welders to be put on standby on the sideline to repair damaged wheelchairs.

    Some of the hottest tickets at the London Paralympics are for wheelchair rugby. The sport is so violent and fierce, that it has been dubbed "Murderball". ITN's Lewis Vaughan Jones met Team Great Britain's inspirational captain.

    The International Wheelchair Rugby Federation has championed the "Meet the Superhumans" campaign and comments posted on its Vimeo page illustrate the ad's power. "Now that's what I'm talking about, 'Thank you for letting me be myself.' Public Enemy never sounded better," one fan wrote. "It's a great soundtrack for our ... lives whether we're Olympians or not."

    Channel 4

    This ad campaign for Channel 4's Paralympic coverage has captured the imagination of many people in Britain.

    The event was founded 1948 to help rehabilitate injured British veterans returning from the Second World War, though many Americans remain unaware that it exists. (There's also a tendency to confuse it with the Special Olympics, which is unrelated. Paralympic athletes compete despite impairments including amputations, blindness, cerebral palsy and mobility disabilities.) However, there are signs that 2012 will be its breakout year.

    Retired U.S. Marine Angela Madsen once lived out of a locker at Disneyland. But the 52-year-old paraplegic turned her life around and has rowed across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. She's now competing for Team USA at the Paralympic Games in London. Madsen told her story to NBC's Jamieson Lesko.

    London-bound veterans push Paralympics back to battlefield roots

    The success of the London 2012 Olympic Games has sparked a spike in public interest in Britain. Ticket sales have wildly exceeded expectations, with organizers saying 2.3 million tickets have already been sold, which is more than any other Paralympic Games in history. There's a high demand for the 200,000 remaining tickets, which will be made available in batches online.

    Soccer superstar David Beckham is serving as an ambassador to the Games and Prince William and Kate Middleton are expected to attend Wednesday night's Opening Ceremony.

    Ahead of the London Paralympics, L.A. Galaxy midfielder David Beckham spent a day learning blind football from Team Great Britain.

    Team USA features 20 military veterans and active duty service members, including some wounded at war in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Among them is U.S. Army 82nd Airborne paratrooper Centra "Ce-Ce" Mazyck, who was paralyzed when her parachute got tangled with another in 2003. Doctors said she'd never walk again but Maczyk refused to listen. And she has proved them wrong.

    "I wasn't hearing it. In my heart, in my soul, I knew I could walk," Mazyck told NBC News. "To this day, I am walking."

    Centra "Ce-Ce" Mazyck, who was paralyzed during a parachute jump with the 82 Airborne in November 2003, will compete in the javelin at the London Paralympics. "This is my second chance," she tells NBC News' Jamieson Lesko.

    The South Carolina-based mother of one is now engaged to be married but admits shes also deeply "in love" with her javelin.

    'Very fortunate'
    U.S. Navy Lt. Bradley Snyder was blinded by a bomb while rushing to the aid of two fellow soldiers in Afghanistan.

    His training regimen had him swimming 4,000 yards a day at his local pool in Baltimore. He is due to compete on the one-year anniversary of his injury. 

    Slideshow: Blinded warrior has visions of gold

    Lt. Brad Snyder lost his sight in an IED explosion in Afghanistan last year. The Navy officer will once again represent the U.S., this time at the London 2012 Paralympics in September.

    Launch slideshow

    "I knew I was very fortunate to be in that hospital bed and not in a coffin in the ground," Snyder said. "I'm going to show people that I'm not going to let this beat me. I'm not going to let blindness build a brick wall around me. I am going to find a way forward."

    From darkness to gold: Blinded Navy swimmer set to race at Paralympics

    South African double amputee and sprinter Oscar Pistorius, who has been nicknamed the "Blade Runner," will compete in the Paralympics after making history by running in the 400-meter event at the Olympics.

    Pistorius is likely to face tough competition from Team USA, including a 25-year-old rocket scientist Jerome Singleton and the 22-year-old Blake Leeper.

    Pistorius, a double amputee born without fibulas in his legs, has trained hard to participate in the Olympics despite having to wear prosthetic legs. NBC's Mary Carillo reports.

    Pistorius, a four-time Paralympic gold medealist, will carry the flag for South Africa at Wednesday's Opening Ceremony. Coldplay will perform at the Closing Ceremony on September 9.

    "I believe these Games are going to change peoples' mindsets about disabilities," Pistorius told Reuters. "In the last two to three years I've seen a shift. For many years people have shunned disability, but I don't have anything in life I'm not able to do. I don't think of my disability, I think of my ability."

    Sixteen countries are competing for the first time. Among them, Haiti will make its debut with two athletes competing in track and field.

    This is the story of two paralympians from Haiti - a nation which is competing in the games for the first time. It's a country where disability is stigmatized and those who are disabled are shunned. ITV's Lewis Vaughan Jones reports on two pioneers who want to overcome prejudice and fill their nation with pride.

    British broadcaster Channel 4 will show 150 hours of programming and about 350 hours more online and across three temporary on-demand channel.

    The International Paralympic Committee predicts that, adding together viewers on each of the 11 days of competition, the total audience figure for the London Paralympics will reach 4 billion.

    It said that four years ago in Beijing, a total overall audience of around 3.8 billion in 80 countries watched the 2008 Paralympics - including a total of 1.4 billion viewings in China across 11 days, 670 million in Japan and 439 million in Germany. Calculating figures in that way means individual viewers are counted several times.

    More coverage of the London Paralympics from NBC News

    The daughter of the founder of the Paralympics told NBC News that the record-breaking ticket sales and interest in the London event would have made her father "immensely proud."

    Of all the events that will be showcased in the Paralympics, few are as intriguing as blind soccer. ITN's Lewis Vaughan Jones met Team Great Britain captain David Clarke who explained how it works.

    Eva Loeffler said Ludwig "Poppa" Guttmann – a neurologist who pioneered the rehabilitation of paralyzed Second World War service members at a hospital near London – would have been "extremely pleased" at how the Games had captured the public imagination.

    The 79-year-old said it was "very appropriate, in a way" that so many veterans from the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts were taking part in this year's event. "Helping the military wounded was where it all began, after all," she said.

    London 2012: Who were the real winners, losers?

    Guttman, who fled Germany in 1933 after being persecuted by Hitler's Nazi regime, challenged medical orthodoxy at Stoke Mandeville hospital, north–west of London, by encouraging patients to play sports rather than accept their paralysis.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    The Agitos symbol of the Parlaympics has replaced the Olympic rings on London's iconic Tower Bridge.

    When London hosted the Summer Olympics in 1948, he created the Stoke Mandeville Games involving just 16 competitors. In the years that followed, he built his competition into the parallel Paralympic Games.

    This year's event will feature 4,200 athletes from 166 teams competing in 20 sports.

    Although Guttman died in 1980, Loeffler has continued his work, becoming a key figure in disabled sport – and has accepted an honorary role as mayor of the Paralympic Athletes' Village at the Olympic Park in East London.

    'Second-class citizens': Wheelchair user's fury at Paralympics over seating

    Lt. Brad Snyder, blinded by an IED explosion in Afghanistan, is now training for the London 2012 Paralympics.

    One of Guttman's dreams was that disabled athletes would ultimately compete alongside their able-bodied counterparts – a wish that came true last month with Pistorius' historic participation at the Olympics.

    "He would have regarded that as a great moment, I'm sure," Loeffler said.

    How to watch the Paralympics from the U.S.

    • The International Paralympic Committee will live stream more than 780 hours of events.
    • NBC Sports Network will air one-hour highlight shows on September 4, 5, 6, and 11. All NBC and NBC Sports Network Paralympic highlight shows and specials will re-air on Universal Sports Network and www.UniversalSports.com.
      Check your local listings for channel info.
    • NBC will broadcast a 90-minute special from 2-3:30 p.m. ET on September 16.
    • The United States Olympic Committee has created a YouTube channel dedicated to the Games.
    • The U.S. Paralympic Team will also provide in-depth coverage of Team USA on its website.

    Fahim Rahimi, is Afghanistan's only competitor at the Paralympics. He lost his leg in a land mine accident when he was just 12, but tonight the powerlifter is carrying the Afghan flag into the Olympic stadium. Jonathan Rugman, Britain's Channel 4 news reports.

    More London 2012 coverage from NBC News:

    • Olympic medalists beginning to rake in gold
    • From javelins to light fixtures: Olympic sell-off begins
    • Restaurateur claims Games cost her business $140k
    • Brazilians party in London as focus shifts to Rio 2016
    • Will Olympics drive UK's couch potatoes to extinction?
    • Olympic jokers: Queen has 'a laugh,' empires compete
    • Who'll win gold for partying? Olympians let hair down

     

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    NBC News' Alastair Jamieson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    90 comments

    Such an inspiring storry.

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    Explore related topics: olympics, uk, disability, london-2012, featured, paralympics, jamieson-lesko
  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    10:29am, EDT

    Reports: Somali Olympic sprinter died when migrant boat sank

    Kerim Okten/ EPA file

    Somalian athlete Samia Yusuf Omar at at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    A woman from war-torn Somalia who rose to fame by running in the 200 meters at the Beijing Olympics drowned while trying to reach Europe ahead of the London 2012 Games, it has emerged.

    Samia Yusuf Omar died when a boat carrying migrants from Libya to Italy sank in April, according to a report in Italian by the Pubblico blog and other Italian media.


    The BBC said the Italian media reports suggest Omar may have been hoping to find a coach in Europe who could help her reach the London Olympics.

    Somali track and field legend Abdi Bile, who was world champion in the 1500 meters in 1987, was quoted as comparing Omar’s fate with that of Somali-born British runner Mo Farah, who won two Olympic gold medals at the London Games.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "We are happy for Mo -- he is our pride," he said, according to Pubblico. "But we will not forget Samia."

    There were few details about what happened to Omar, but BBC News said Somalia’s National Olympic Committee had confirmed she had died. NBC News was unable to reach the committee on the phone number listed on its website and an email was not immediately returned.

    Italy's Coast Guard rescues 80 migrants from an overcrowded boat stranded just off the coast of the southern island of Lampedusa. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    There were tributes to Omar from across the world on the comments section of a YouTube video of her race in Beijing.

    “Love, hope and peace from Barcelona Samia. Your still alive in ours hearts. RIP,” one user, frankiee78, said.

    Somali Olympic chief killed in Mogadishu suicide blast

    “Brave is the one who never give up ... Even being the last one on this heat, Samia was proud of being there for her country. Every time when a shooting star will shows in a Somalian sky, it will be Samia the one who is going to be running for her country.... RIP from Columbus, OH,” MrEmilito74 said.

    There were messages from people in the United States, Serbia, Mexico, Portugal, Uruguay and other countries.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Wife of disgraced Chinese leader gets death sentence with reprieve
    • Russian top clerics forgive Pussy Riot, ask for mercy
    • With wife's conviction, what is next for China's Bo Xilai?
    • Assange in balcony appeal: Release Bradley Manning
    • Czech police accuse man of plotting Norway-like copycat terrorist attack
    • Government minister among 32 killed as Sudanese helicopter crashes into mountain
    • Video: Chaos follows Syrian airstrikes
    • Tropical Storm Helene slams Mexico; Hurricane Gordon heads for Azores

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    63 comments

    What a tragic end to a young life. It reminds me that no matter how bad we think our government is, none of us are literally dying to get away.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boat, olympics, libya, italy, somalia, london-2012, sank, samia-yusuf-omar
  • 29
    Jul
    2012
    10:23am, EDT

    Olympic crasher marched with Indian team at opening ceremony

    Mark Humphrey / AP

    An opening ceremony cast member walked with the Indian team during the Opening Ceremony at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Friday.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    A woman managed to gatecrash the Indian Olympic team’s march round the stadium at the Games' opening ceremony, it has emerged.

    The interloper –- said to be one of the thousands of volunteers who took part in the show –- walked alongside flag-carrier and wrestler Sushil Kumar at the head of the team at Friday's event, causing anger among Indian Olympic officials.


    In stark contrast to the athletes, who were dressed in blue and yellow, the interloper was dressed in a red jacket and light-blue pants.

    She also sported a broad smile in some of the photographs.

    Sebastian Coe, chairman of Games organizers LOCOG, told the daily press conference Sunday that he could confirm “that she was a cast member [of the opening ceremony show], who clearly got slightly over-excited.”

    Military drafted in to fill empty seats at London Olympics

    “I think there’s a very important point here to take into consideration – and I don’t minimize the fact she got into the Opening Ceremony –  she could not have got in the opening ceremony without having gone through all our security protocols anyway,” Coe said.

    “Don’t run away with the idea she had walked in off the street to do that,” he added.

    London protesters decry 'Corporate Olympics'

    He said he would be speaking to Indian officials about what happened.

    The Deccan Chronicle newspaper identified the woman as a graduate student from Bangalore, India.

    Read more on the Olympics from NBC News

    Indian Olympic official P.K. Muralidharan Raja was quoted by the paper as saying they had been "initially told that she would accompany the contingent ’til the track, but she went on to take the entire lap. There was another man also, but he stayed back and did not enter the stadium.”

    Harpal Singh Bedi, Indian Olympic team press attache, told a press conference that the gatecrasher "not only walked, she led our contingent. It looked like she was the leader," according to an AP Television report.

    "... if this had happened in India, people would say 'you don't know how to run the Games, security problems,' ... I think this was definitely a security lapse," he added.

    More London 2012 coverage:

    • UK military asked to cover 3,500 Olympic security worker shortfall
    • Olympics hurdle: US athletes' bus driver gets lost in London
    • Inside Olympic Village: World's top athletes share college dorm-style rooms
    • London's 'East End': From haven for gangsters to Olympic showcase
    • Terror suspect's eye color? Flying cameras to spy during Games
    • Gigantic welcome for London Olympic attendees
    • Venues for the London 2012 Olympic Games
    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp faces ax
    • VIDEO: Olympic torchbearer proposes mid-relay
    • Brits revel in gloom ahead of Games, but don't believe the gripe
    • Olympic housing crunch: Landlords evict tenants to gouge tourists
    • At London Olympics, dogs have sniffed out key anti-terror role
    • Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor
    • Go behind the scenes with our 'TODAY in London' blog

    92 comments

    She was their guide, making sure the team went to the correct place, as well as being a cast member so NO security breach. She got carried away and kept walking when she should have stopped. To be honest at least she was smiling and waving the rest of the Indian's looked as if they had something stu …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, games, team, indian, march, u-k, opening-ceremony, london-2012, featured, gatecrasher
  • 29
    Jul
    2012
    8:09am, EDT

    Military drafted in to fill empty seats at London Olympics

    Ivan Alvarado / Reuters

    Spectators sit among empty seats during the men's Group A volleyball match between Britain and Bulgaria at the London 2012 Olympic Games on Sunday.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    LONDON - Britain was forced to bring in military personnel at short notice to provide security for the London Olympics -- and has now done the same to help fill thousands of empty seats at several venues despite the massive public demand for tickets.

    Many ordinary people who applied for tickets -- in what was essentially a lottery – missed out and there were numerous complaints about the allocation process.


    But the first day saw rows of empty seats at events including swimming, dressage, tennis, gymnastics and volleyball -- according to reports in The Guardian and Telegraph newspapers -- to the outrage of many, including U.K. Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt.

    Hunt said the sight of so many empty seats was "very disappointing," according to ITV News. "I was at the Beijing Games, in 2008, and one of the lessons that we took away from that, is that full stadia create the best atmosphere, it's best for the athletes, it's more fun for the spectators, it's been an absolute priority," he added.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    London 2012 organizers LOCOG said it was looking into the issue, saying it appeared many of the empty seats were in "accredited seating areas," which are reserved for members of the "Olympic family," such as officials, athletes, their family and friends, journalists, and some corporate sponsors.

    Slideshow: Venues for 2012 London Olympic Games

    Oda / Getty Images

    From Wimbledon to Wembley Stadium to The Dome, a look at the venues for the 2012 London Olympic Games.

    Launch slideshow

    At the daily briefing Sunday, LOCOG chairman Sebastian Coe said most venues were "stuffed to the gunnels," but admitted some of the "tens of thousands" of Olympic family members had either not turned up -- on the morning after the Opening Ceremony and associated parties -- or had only gone for a short while before moving on somewhere else.

    There was laughter as he was asked about the logistics of "drafting in the army" to fill seats.

    "We won't be cancelling leave," Coe quipped, saying military personnel and others, such as local teachers and students, were simply asked if they wanted to see events when there were unfilled seats. Tickets were also being sold to the public, he said.

    Coe, who said 75 percent of tickets went to the public, said he did not expect the situation to continue.

    Will Mott/@wmottITV

    This picture of empty seats at the swimming heats, for which there had been very high demand for tickets, was posted on Twitter by ITV News producer Will Mott.

    "I'm pretty sure this is not going to be an issue that we are going to be talking about in three to four days' time," he said, explaining accredited ticket holders would still be "figuring out" what their duties involved, transport arrangements and other logistical issues this early in the Games.

    "I do take it seriously. Where we possibly can, we will get people into those seats where and when they are not being used," Coe added.

    Twitter was abuzz with pictures of empty seats and criticism of the large areas without spectators at the affected events.

    Sally Bercow, wife of the speaker of the House of Commons in the U.K. parliament, said in a message on Twitter that she was “loving” the Games, but added she was “so cross at all the empty seats. Sort it out FGS! So unfair for all of us who wanted to go :-/”

    Loving Olympics but so cross at all the empty seats. Sort it out FGS! So unfair for all of us who wanted to go :-/

    — Sally Bercow (@SallyBercow) July 28, 2012

    'How dare they?'
    Comedian Jenny Eclair ‏was equally annoyed. “I've seen enough empty seats in my life without watching the Olympics - tragic waste - how dare they?” she tweeted.

    I've seen enough empty seats in my life without watching the Olympics - tragic waste - how dare they?

    — Jenny Eclair (@jennyeclair) July 28, 2012

    And former British newspaper editor and CNN broadcaster Piers Morgan tweeted that “These empty corporate sponsor seats at swimming etc are a total bloody disgrace. Sort it out, Lord Coe.”

    London protesters decry 'corporate Olympics'

    Follow Ian Johnston

    The Guardian said there were an estimated 500 empty seats at the swimming heats featuring Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte; more than 1,000 at the gymnastics morning section, which was supposed to be sold out; and more than 3,500 at the volleyball.

    These empty corporate sponsor seats at swimming etc are a total bloody disgrace. Sort it out, Lord Coe. #London2012

    — Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) July 28, 2012

    The Telegraph’s report about the issue had more than 1,000 comments from readers.

    “I was at the volleyball last night in Earls Court. Virtually all the prime seats right in front of the court were empty. An absolute disgrace and extremely unfair to the competitors who would surely appreciate a crowd of supportive fans to cheer them on,” one reader, kafkander, wrote.

    Olympics party: In shadow of Games, London celebrates

    “The time to fix it is now. Simply issue a decree that if people are not in their seats by 45 mins before event start time, the seats will be re-let at cut price cash on the door fees … I would have liked to have gone but couldnt get tickets and/or was disenchanted by all the reports of the Pre Olympic ticket scandals and outrageous pricing,” another, whitevanman, said.

    More London 2012 coverage:

    • UK military asked to cover 3,500 Olympic security worker shortfall
    • Olympics hurdle: US athletes' bus driver gets lost in London
    • Inside Olympic Village: World's top athletes share college dorm-style rooms
    • London's 'East End': From haven for gangsters to Olympic showcase
    • Terror suspect's eye color? Flying cameras to spy during Games
    • Gigantic welcome for London Olympic attendees
    • Venues for the London 2012 Olympic Games
    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp faces ax
    • VIDEO: Olympic torchbearer proposes mid-relay
    • Brits revel in gloom ahead of Games, but don't believe the gripe
    • Olympic housing crunch: Landlords evict tenants to gouge tourists
    • At London Olympics, dogs have sniffed out key anti-terror role
    • Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor
    • Go behind the scenes with our 'TODAY in London' blog

     

    187 comments

    Sounds like greed caused all the empty seats.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, games, tickets, uk, london-2012, featured, sebastian-coe, empty-seats
  • 27
    Jul
    2012
    4:32pm, EDT

    Talks ongoing to allow Saudi judo fighter to compete wearing hijab

    The International Judo Federation ruled one of Saudi Arabia's first female Olympic athletes will not be allowed to wear a hijab in the judo competition. Human Rights Watch advocate Minky Worden reacts.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Olympic and Saudi Arabian officials are in talks with judo chiefs to find a solution after the sport's governing body ruled the Saudi's female competitor would have to fight without a hijab, or Islamic headscarf.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    On Thursday, the head of the International Judo Federation (IJF) president Marius Vizer confirmed Wodjan Ali Seraj Abdulrahim Shaherkani, one of the first two female athletes sent to the Olympics by the conservative Muslim kingdom, would not be allowed to wear a hijab.

    Shaherkani is due to compete in the women's heavyweight tournament next Friday, and her participation could now be in doubt.

    "We still have one week. She is still scheduled to compete, there's no information that she won't compete," IJF spokesman Nicolas Messner told Reuters. "We still have time."


    He said talks were underway between the Saudi Arabian National Olympic Committee, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the IJF to attempt to resolve the issue.

    He did not elaborate on how this could be achieved but said there was "very good collaboration."

    IOC spokesman Mark Adams confirmed there had been a meeting on Thursday.

    "It was a positive discussion and we are confident a solution will be found," he said. Asked what that solution would be, he said: "There are a range of options."

    No one from the Saudi delegation could be reached for comment.

    However, a Saudi official had told Reuters earlier this month they expected that the women would have to obey the dress code of Islamic law. He did not elaborate, but other conservative Muslim countries have interpreted this to mean a headscarf, long sleeves and long pants.

    Vizer told reporters that Shaherkani would fight according to "the principle and spirit of judo" and thus without a headscarf.

    The federation makes the argument that wearing the headscarf would be unsafe. But Human Rights Watch's Director of Global Initiatives, Minky Worden, says a number of federations do allow the wearing of head coverings that comply with religious requirements.

    "Many of the judo federations, especially for example the Asian judo federation, which has Malaysia and Singapore, those are women who do compete in headscarves, and there have long been accommodations that are made for religious dress," Worden said.

    Shaherkani, who will compete in the 78 kg (172 pounds) category in judo, and teenage 800-meter runner Sarah Attar were the first Saudi women allowed to take part in the Olympics after talks between the IOC and the country.

    The decision to allow female Saudi athletes to compete at London was praised by IOC President Jacques Rogge at the time.

    "This is very positive news and we will be delighted to welcome these two athletes in London in a few weeks time," Rogge said in a statement in early July.

    Saudi Arabia was one of three countries, alongside Brunei and Qatar, never to have sent female athletes to the Olympics but the latter two confirmed earlier this year that their delegations would include women.

    “This was to have been a breakthrough for women’s rights," Worden said. "It would be a shame to only have one [woman competing]."

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Syria regime 'reeling, armed to the teeth' with chemical weapons
    • 'Fairy tale': Is the Olympics really neutral?
    • Engel: Rebels dismayed over US statement on Syria
    • Brits rally around Games after Romney's Olympic gaffe
    • After tough London trip, Romney heads to Israel
    • Millionaire medalists: Does the Olympic spirit live on?
    • Wife of ousted China politician charged with murder

    News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    34 comments

    Lets be real about what's going on. This is not about wearing the hijab but about muslins wanting to take control. the Olympic commitee's should stand their ground. "God" forbid if we should challenge one of their rules. Let them have thier own Olympics in their country.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, saudi-arabia, london-2012, judo, featured, hijab, wodjan-ali-seraj-abdulrahim-shaherkani
  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    4:02am, EDT

    Going for gold: British workers cash in on Olympics with strike threats

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    A commuter waits for a bus at London Bridge Station on Tuesday. In June, two-thirds of London's 8,000 red buses were off the road because of a one-day strike by thousands of drivers.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    LONDON -- For some, the Olympic Games represent the epitome of sporting achievement and fair play, and a noble set of ideals that help inspire humanity to dream of a better world.

    But if you are a driver of one of London’s famous red buses, it should mean about $900 extra in your paycheck. And if you are a British worker who isn’t getting a coveted Olympics bonus, it means you might just go on strike just to make the point that you’re not happy.

    Then there are those for whom the Games is an ideal time to raise a grievance over pay, pensions or working conditions, in the hope that the threat of industrial unrest -- as the world focuses its attention on the U.K. -- will speed the negotiations along.

    Labor unions in Britain may have been relatively quiet over the government’s austerity policies, but the arrival of the Olympics has given them the chance to flex their muscles in a way that some see as far from sporting.


    On Thursday -- the day before the London 2012 opening ceremony -- thousands of government workers, including Border Agency guards at airports, are due to go on strike for 24 hours in a dispute over pay and other issues. Marianna Panizza, a senior press officer at Heathrow Airport, said in an email that so far "immigration waiting times [were] well within their targets," adding that "We hope this will continue through the strike action." (Update: The PCS union called off the planned strike by U.K. border force staff on Wednesday.)

    More London 2012 coverage from NBCNews.com


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Then on Friday, RMT union members at South West Trains, which runs services into London, will stop working overtime or coming in on rest days until Aug. 12 because they have not been offered an Olympic bonus.

    Visitors arriving in London for the start of the Games should be extra careful with their possessions, as unionized staff in the lost property office at Transport for London – the company that runs the city's Tube subway network – have been told not to work shifts from 7 a.m. Friday until 7 a.m. Saturday. That also goes for staff at Transport for London’s travel information centers and the London Transport Museum.

    'A question of fairness'
    A dispute over Olympic payments could also disrupt London’s so-called “Boris Bikes” – bicycles available to hire cheaply on the street – from early Friday to Sunday morning.

    London Olympics: 8,000-mile torch relay around the U.K.

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    "The traffic affects us more than anybody else," says bus driver Stephen Hall, pictured on his break at London Bridge Station on Tuesday. "The tube drivers aren't actually doing any more work than before, but we are."

    Geoff Martin, a spokesman for the RMT union, defended workers seeking a slice of the Olympic “windfall.”

    “It’s a question of fairness,” he told NBCNews.com. “The vast majority of our members have got them [Olympic bonuses] … if it is right for those members to get a share of the additional profits companies will generate – which they will – why shouldn’t staff working in other companies benefit as well?”

    Follow Ian Johnston

    Martin said 80,000 extra passengers a day were expected to use South West Trains services, meaning more work for staff.

    “The point is, this is a unique set of circumstances. It’s the biggest transport challenge London has ever faced,” he added.

    Martin said most transport companies had been “very reasonable” and agreed to let workers get their “fair share of the windfall.”

    Ramadan set to cause 'traffic chaos' near London's Olympic site?

    Quite how many more people, if any, will visit the London Transport Museum -- home to such attractions as the 1866 Metropolitan Railway A class 4-4-0T steam locomotive (number 23) – because of the Olympics remains to be seen.

    Last month, two-thirds of London’s 8,000 red buses were off the road because of a one-day strike by thousands of drivers.

    The show of strength appears to have worked as last week saw the drivers get their deal. Staff will get an extra payment of about $42 a shift, which will mean an extra $895 or so over the period of the Games for the average worker.

    Olivia Harris / Reuters, file

    London bus drivers stand on a picket line near the West Ham Bus Garage in east London on June 22.

    'Ambassadors for London'
    A spokesman for the Unite union, which represents drivers and other workers, told NBC News that they were entitled to the extra money because of the “massive increase in passengers, the increase in traffic.”

    “They’ll end up working longer and finishing their shifts later,” the spokesman said.  “They have to manage the entire bus; they have to often help passengers; they have more demands on them from passengers; they have to help a lot of people who don’t speak English.

    “Our members are going to be ambassadors for London. They are going to be keeping London moving during the Olympics,” he added. “In such exceptional circumstances, they should have their extra contribution recognized financially … they shouldn’t have to be doing extra work for free.”

    33 Team USA athletes to watch in London

    Some 450 members of the Aslef union who work at East Midlands Trains also plan to strike on Aug. 6, 7, and 8, in a dispute over pensions.

    Tony Travers, of the London School of Economics, told London’s Evening Standard newspaper that transport unions had the government and Olympic organizers “over a barrel.”

    “With an extra three million rail and [subway] journeys expected during the Games, there will be queuing at stations and dreadful congestion on trains. If the bus drivers were on strike, it is hard to imagine how bad it might get,” he said.

    This family's Olympic odyssey involves bikes, satellite dish -- and reindeer pelts

    But Travers also warned the unions might pay a price after London 2012 if the government decided to take revenge with “tough anti-strike laws.”

    As the opening ceremony of the Olympics approaches, London is covering its bases with an influx of security forces on the ground, in the air and in the water. But officials still worry about the possibility of a 'soft target,' such as an attack on a bus, that would have a huge emotional impact on the city. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    'Ronald Reagan approach'
    Thursday's planned strike by Border Agency and other government staff has caused considerable anger.

    U.K. government Cabinet member Jeremy Hunt told the BBC Sunday that some members of the government had considered what he described as the “Ronald Reagan approach” of firing the striking public workers.

    "I can tell you amongst [government] ministers there have been people asking whether we should be doing that, but I don't want to escalate things by talking about that right now, because I know amongst those 600 people there are lots of people who want to do the right thing and turn up for work," he told Radio 5 Live.

    Troops everywhere, long lines and moans: A very British Olympic Games

    Matthew Sinclair, director of the TaxPayers’ Alliance campaign group, was equally appalled, saying ordinary people would be “disgusted” at the union’s attempt to “disrupt the Olympics when the world’s eyes will be focused on Britain.”

    A newly-redesigned version of London's iconic red bus may have sleek curves, but at $36,000 per seat are they worth the price?

    “We must not allow a selfish minority to disrupt the Olympics in a vain attempt to stop necessary restraint in public spending, and make the Games even more expensive for hard-pressed taxpayers,” he added.

    But not all unions are taking advantage of the authorities’ precarious position on Travers’ barrel.

    A spokesman for the Transport Salaried Staffs' Association said the union had decided to cancel a strike ballot at Virgin Trains over the sacking of a union official.

    He said this was partly due to an agreement to negotiate but also because of a plea by Transport Secretary Justine Greening for the Olympics not to be disrupted by industrial action "in the greater interest of the country."

    Slideshow: Olympic torch carries the flame to London 2012

    Lit by the sun's rays in Greece, the Olympic torch takes a 70-day, 8,000 mile trip to London for the 2012 summer Games.

    Launch slideshow

    More London 2012 coverage:

    • UK military asked to cover 3,500 Olympic security worker shortfall
    • Olympics hurdle: US athletes' bus driver gets lost in London
    • Inside Olympic Village: World's top athletes share college dorm-style rooms
    • London's 'East End': From haven for gangsters to Olympic showcase
    • Terror suspect's eye color? Flying cameras to spy during Games
    • Gigantic welcome for London Olympic attendees
    • Venues for the London 2012 Olympic Games
    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp faces ax
    • VIDEO: Olympic torchbearer proposes mid-relay
    • Brits revel in gloom ahead of Games, but don't believe the gripe
    • Olympic housing crunch: Landlords evict tenants to gouge tourists
    • At London Olympics, dogs have sniffed out key anti-terror role
    • Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor
    • Go behind the scenes with our 'TODAY in London' blog

    221 comments

    Just FIRE then already..... Hey if they do not want to work replace them with someone who does.....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, games, strike, bonuses, unions, uk, london-2012, featured
  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    3:21am, EDT

    This family's epic Olympic odyssey includes bikes, a satellite dish -- and reindeer pelts

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Svein Bergheim leads his family through the streets of North London on Monday. They were on their way to Box Hill, about 19 miles south-west of the U.K. capital, to watch the Olympic men's road race event.

    By Jim Seida, NBC News

    Updated at 10:33 a.m. ET: LONDON -- Even in the chaos that is typical London traffic, it’s easy to spot the Bergheim family. They’re the ones pedaling bicycles adorned with Norwegian flags. Behind each bike is a trailer laden down with everything from a satellite dish, television and portable generator to stacks of reindeer pelts.   

    “My average uphill speed is two to four kilometers (1.2 miles to 2.5 miles) per hour,” says 50-year-old Svein, who’s leading his family on what could only be called an odyssey so they can cheer their countrymen on in the men’s road race on July 28. Svein says his bike and trailer weigh 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds). (See author's note on discussion board below.)


    “We went by boat from Norway to Denmark,” Svein’s wife Elisabeth, 43, told NBCNews.com. “Then we drove to Esbjerg and took the ferry for 18 hours to Harwich (England).” That’s where Svein and Elisabeth, along with their 13-year-old daughter, Ida, and their 8-year-old son, Magnus, started pedaling toward London. That was four days and more than 90 miles ago.

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    An impatient taxi driver forces Elisabeth Bergheim and daughter Ina into the street while laying on the horn.

    The Bergheims found themselves in a swell of taxis, motorcycles and double-decker buses as they navigated their way through North London to their hotel. “It’s very scary,” says Ida, pronounced ‘Eeda’. “Big trucks pass and I get the wind in my face.” Soon after, as Ida spins to keep up with her family as they pass through a yellow then red light, a driver piloting a taxi covered in Great Britain’s colors steps on the gas while standing on the horn in a mock “I’m going to run you over!” move. Welcome to London.

    More London 2012 coverage from NBC News

    While this might seem like the adventure of a lifetime to most, it’s pretty standard fare for the Bergheims. They’ve been to several Tour de France races, and Svein and Ida were in Vancouver for the last Winter Olympics. “He gave me this trip for our 20th anniversary,” says Elisabeth. "But maybe we’ll get divorced when we’re finished.” 

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Svein Bergheim stops to check directions to a hotel on his phone. His family's odyssey has taken them more than 500 miles by boat, car, ferry and now bicycle to be part of the Olympic Games.

    Their plan is to set up camp near Box Hill, the site of the cycling road race events. They will be hard to miss, what with half-a-dozen Norwegian flags blowing in the wind while they watch live coverage of the event that they’ll be pulling down with their satellite dish and sending to their television. They won’t get to see the event live as it’s sold out and they don’t have tickets. 

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    In addition to a generator, satellite dish and television, the Bergheims are traveling with reindeer skins to help keep them warm while camping. Here they're pedaling along a special Olympic lane in North London. The lanes, designed to speed Olympic athletes and officials through London's thick traffic, will be closed even to bicyclists beginning Wednesday.

    “It’s a game, it’s for fun!” says Elisabeth, “It’s (the Olympics) an event for the children and we want them to experience it in a fun way, not with all the security and everything.”

    Slideshow: Olympic torch carries the flame to London 2012

    Lit by the sun's rays in Greece, the Olympic torch takes a 70-day, 8,000 mile trip to London for the 2012 summer Games.

    Launch slideshow

    More London 2012 coverage:

    • UK military asked to cover 3,500 Olympic security worker shortfall
    • Olympics hurdle: US athletes' bus driver gets lost in London
    • Inside Olympic Village: World's top athletes share college dorm-style rooms
    • London's 'East End': From haven for gangsters to Olympic showcase
    • Terror suspect's eye color? Flying cameras to spy during Games
    • Gigantic welcome for London Olympic attendees
    • Venues for the London 2012 Olympic Games
    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp faces ax
    • VIDEO: Olympic torchbearer proposes mid-relay
    • Brits revel in gloom ahead of Games, but don't believe the gripe
    • Olympic housing crunch: Landlords evict tenants to gouge tourists
    • At London Olympics, dogs have sniffed out key anti-terror role
    • Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor
    • Go behind the scenes with our 'TODAY in London' blog

     

    10 comments

    More power to the Bergheims! I envy you and hope you enjoy the show!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, britain, norway, uk, london-2012, featured, jim-seida
  • 11
    Jul
    2012
    12:44pm, EDT

    UK military asked to cover 3,500 Olympic security worker shortfall

    Just two weeks away from the Olympic Opening Ceremony, the British government has announced thousands of additional soldiers will be sent to provide security at game venues.

    By Keir Simmons, NBC News

    Updated at 2 p.m. ET: LONDON — Britain's military was asked to provide an 3,500 extra personnel for the Olympic Games with only 16 days to go before the opening ceremony, government sources told NBC News on Wednesday.

    Private security contractor G4S conceded it may not be able to supply the numbers of guards — made up of certified security workers and temporary recruits — it had originally agreed.



    Follow @msnbc_world

    A company statement said: "We have encountered some issues in relation to workforce supply and scheduling over the last couple of weeks, but are resolving these every day and remain committed to providing a security workforce for the start of the London 2012 Games.

    "Our planning with [The London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games] and other security agencies allows for a variety of contingencies which have been reviewed in the build-up to the Games. We accept that the Government has decided to overlay additional resources," the statement added.

    It would be potentially a major embarrassment for Olympic organizers who have insisted plans are in place to ensure the games is safe.

    Matt Dunham / AP

    In this May 3, 2012 file photo, Sergeant Craig from Britain's Royal Artillery regiment holds a high-velocity missile, or HVM, lightweight multiple launcher during a media event ahead of a training exercise designed to test military procedures prior to the Olympic period in Blackheath, London.

    G4S has a contract reportedly worth almost $460 million to provide the personnel, many of whom are still being trained.

    The military had previously been asked to provide a total of about 13,000 personnel, including up to 7,500 for civilian security at games venues. The remainder will be involved in military operations linked to games security.

    UK detains terror suspect who traveled close to London's Olympic Park

    Sources told NBC News that some of the extra 3,500 will come from a contingency of 1,000 soldiers on standby for Olympic emergencies.

    The news follows reports last month of serious concerns within the Home Office -- an equivalent to the Department of Homeland Security -- that G4S would be unable to meet its obligations for the Olympics.

    In June, ITV News reported concerns at the effectiveness of security provided by G4S staff under training for the Olympics.

    Simon Israel, the Home Affairs Correspondent for Channel 4 News, posted on Twitter that G4S would be fined $77,000 for each day it failed to provide the agreed number of personnel.

    Have also been told G4S penalised �£50000 a day per venue for not meeting staffing levels at venues

    — simon israel (@simonisrael) July 11, 2012

    It is the largest British security operation carried out in peacetime.

    Thousands of new recruits are being trained to operate x-ray machines, search vehicles and stand guard at Olympic venues across the country.

    'In the line of fire': UK confirms 6 London Olympic missile defense sites

    Such is the scale of the operation; the training will continue right up until a few days before the opening ceremony.

    More than 100,000 people applied for the 10,400 temporary jobs in what G4S had described as one of the biggest paid recruitment drives in Britain this century. Last week, Ian Horseman Sewell, managing director of G4S Global Events, told Reuters in an interview that the company was "absolutely on track to deliver". 

    The issue of security is a particularly relevant one to Olympics organizers. The decision to award the Olympics to London was announced on July 6, 2005. Just a day later, London suffered its worst peacetime attack when four suicide bombers killed 52 commuters.

    Msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson and Reuters contributed to this report. This story was first published by ITV News, the UK partner of NBC News.

    More London 2012 coverage:

    • Disabled visitors face high hurdles to London Olympics
    • Terror suspect's eye color? Flying cameras to spy during Games
    • Londoners express hopes, frustrations as Olympics come to town
    • Flagship McDonalds in Olympic Park becomes super-sized
    • Olympic torchbearers race to cash in
    • Will world's most expensive cable car be ready for Olympics?
    • Now towering over London: 'The Godzilla of public art'
    • Venues for the London 2012 Olympic Games
    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp faces ax
    • VIDEO: Olympic torchbearer proposes mid-relay
    • Brits revel in gloom ahead of Games, but don't believe the gripe
    • Olympic housing crunch: Landlords evict tenants to gouge tourists
    • At London Olympics, dogs have sniffed out key anti-terror role
    • Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor
    • Go behind the scenes with our 'TODAY in London' blog

     

    100 comments

    I have a feelling this event is going to be an absolute disaster.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: games, security, military, olympic, nbc, london-2012, keir-simmons
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